Vatican denies reports that Benedict XVI has neurological disease

Benedict XVI puts on the Fisherman's Ring during his first Mass as pope in St Peter's Square in 2005 (AFP/Getty Images)

A German magazine quoted the Pope Emeritus's brother as saying Benedict had a degenerative disease

The Vatican denied that retired Pope Benedict XVI has a degenerative neurological disease or paralyzing condition after his brother, 94-year-old Mgr Georg Ratzinger, told a magazine that Pope Benedict had a debilitating disease.

In an interview published February 13 in the German weekly entertainment magazine, Neue Post, Mgr Ratzinger said Pope Benedict suffered from a nerve disease that was slowly paralyzing him.

“The greatest concern is that the paralysis could eventually reach his heart and then everything could end quickly,” Mgr Ratzinger was quoted as saying.

“I pray every day to ask God for the grace of a good death, at a good moment, for my brother and me. We both have this great wish,” he added.

Although news about the interview also was published on the German edition of the Vatican News website, the Holy See press office said in a statement on February 15 that “the alleged news reports of a paralyzing or degenerative illness are false.”

“In two months, Benedict XVI will turn 91 years old and, as he himself recently said, he feels the weight of years, which is normal at this age,” the statement said.

In a letter to an Italian newspaper dated February 5, Pope Benedict said that “with the slow diminishing of my physical strength, inwardly I am on a pilgrimage toward Home.”

“It is a great grace in this last, sometimes tiring stage of my journey, to be surrounded by a love and kindness that I never could have imagined,” Pope Benedict wrote.

He had announced his retirement from the papacy on February 11, 2013, and stepped down on February 28, 2013.